----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Dear MAPS-L recipients: The following is a list of products showing when and where daylight covers the Earth's surface and the time. This list is a compilation of responses to an inquirey posted over MAPS-L this past April. Thank you again for all of the helpful responses. Good Luck. Enjoy. M Yarrington UWEC The Sunlit Earth: 1) A shareware program for IBM compatibles called Geoclock, Probably available on the commercial BBS systems such as AOL, Compuserve etc. A computer program named Geoclock. It used to be shareware, and still may be in an abbreviated form, but is inexpensive to buy. It shows the Sun moving across the surface of the Earth and you can specify time of year, etc. Currently reviewing "GeoClock" and "GeoGlobe," an integrated, modular set of Windows programs by Precision Map Graphics. Start-up is $50; fully tricked out is $100. An unbelievable bargain. E-mail [log in to unmask] for on-line ordering instructions, or write GeoClock, 2218 N Tuckahoe St., Arlington, VA 22205. Full description is in the current "GeoClock News" available from publisher. A great (i.e. fun/easy/makes you look smart) package--you'll be amazed. Version 6.0 is $35 for Geoclock plus $15 for GeoGlobe. Supplemental map sets are $40 for all four (essential for map libraries). I haven't seen the earlier versions but would bet the resolution has improved considerably from earlier versions and software exploits faster CPUs; it's very quick--I was getting strobe effects when playing with the sidereal clock! 2) A company called Geochron makes quite an amazing product. It is a world map that shows the exact coverage of daylight, every day throughout every year. It is done with a light behind the map and somehow it shades the areas of the earth in darkness. It also serves as a calender and clock for the entire earth. It is pretty expensive but if you ever see one you'll know why. Beautiful wood frame, etc. It really is amazing. If you need more information contact Jim Howitt at Latitudes Map & Travel Store in Mpls. (612) 927-9061. Geochron lighted maps (World Time Indicators) sell in the thousands of dollars. The clockwork machinery inside generates a sine-wave shade behind a lit mercator map. The shade changes shape over the course of the year to reflect the angle of the sun. Their contact in the 1994-5 IMTA directory is: Geochron Enterprises, Inc 899 Arguello St Redwood City, CA 94063 415-361-1771 * Fax 415-361-1780 Check with a firm called Geochron Enterprises Inc. (800) 342 1661 or 415 361 1771 for their world clock (technically a map, shows day/night areas). 3) Small Blue Planet--the Real Picture Atlas, a CD atlas from Now What Software has a feature called Chronosphere which highlights the patterns of day and night on a moving map and spinning globe and tells time and day from where you are to where you want to go. Costs $59.95. For more info contact Now What Software, 2303 Sacramento, San Francisco, CA 94115 or (800) 322-1954. -- Gwen Curtis, Map Collection, Univ. of Kentucky Libraries, Lexington, KY ([log in to unmask]) 4) I have seen a number of applications for PC's that show a graphical (Mercator) representation of the entire Earth with dynamic night/day shadowing and time zones. These can be found on almost any Bulletin Board you can log into. Many of the names escape me, but the are fairly obvious. 5) The other item you may look for.. For many Unix platforms, there is available a very vivid background bitmap called 'xearth', which depicts the earth as seen from a geo-synchronous point in space, has time shadowing abd rotates according to the date / time set to your system. The reference point is around 30 - 40 degrees longitude. No country outlines tho. 6) A globe made by Columbus Verlag Paul Oestergaard in Berlin/Frankfurt (Germany) in 1981 which contains a light-mechanism which shows day/night and shadowzones. The mechanism is a rotating calendar, so you can follow the change in seasons. The mechanism also contains a small magnifying-glass which shows the position of the sun with respect to the plane of the equator. For the moment - 24 April- I can see that the sun rises some 12-13 degrees North of the equator, crawling slowly to the Tropic of Cancer, and the North Pole is getting ready for Midsummernight as light is already 24 hours present above 85 degrees North. We also have a poster showing the seasons with regard to the sun, but I find the globe more self-explanatory as the change can be followed day by day. Maybe there is an American globe-company which has the same kind of globes 7) "World Watch Timepiece for Windows" at @$30.00. Originally a large stand alone piece for $2000.00. This easy-to-read graphic tells you instantly whichparts of the world are in sunlight and which are in the dark. Also works as a screen saver. We just found out about it and have ordered one for our public terminal, as this is a frequently asked question. Also does time zones. 8) Rand McNally One seen on sale in the Philadelphia Rand McNally. Some of the fancier mail order catalogs may have them. 9) Try Hammacher Schlemmer or/and The Sharper Image for such mechanical maps One of them had them in their catalogue.. 10) Earth, moon, sun version produced in this century with a miniature earth globe by Phillips of London & Liverpool. It was a complex clock-like mechanism that showed in an analogue way exactly the area of the earth lit at different times and seasons. The brass rim gave the months of the year. 11) XX Have you sampled?: National Atlas Information Service XX NAIS on the Web URL: XX http://www-nais.ccm.emr.ca/ XX National Atlas maps; Geographic Names XX 'Make a map'; Quizzes, etc., etc. XX